Moore v. Studebaker Bros. Mfg. Co.

136 S.W. 570, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 232
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 8, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 570 (Moore v. Studebaker Bros. Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Studebaker Bros. Mfg. Co., 136 S.W. 570, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 232 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

BOOKHOUT, J.

Y. L. Moore, appellant, filed this suit September 18, 1907, in the district court of Dallas county to recover of the Studebaker Bros. Manufacturing Company, appellee, commissions due him as traveling salesman on orders taken by him during the term of his employment, embracing the year 1906, on which shipments were after-wards made during 1906, or after that time in 1907, and also on shipments into the territory assigned him for 1906, on voluntary or mail orders shipped into said territory during that year.

Appellant was paid a salary of $200 per month and his expenses, under a written contract so providing, and no question is made as to these matters. The commissions claimed herein were based upon a separate written contract, made at the same time as the salary contract, under which he claims he was entitled to commissions in excess of $100,000 on all orders taken by him during 1906 to the amount of $17,500, a commission of 2 per cent., and in excess of the $17,-500 a commission of 1 per cent. The contract hinges on the construction and use of the word “shipment” claimed by appellant to have been slipped into the contract as a “joker” to give a covert or hidden meaning to it contrary to the expressed meaning of the parties made before and at the time the contract was executed, and this covert or hidden meaning is now relied upon by ap-pellee to deprive appellant of his just rights.

The trial was before the court and a jury, and under an instructed verdict the jury found for plaintiff $73.15, and the judgment was so rendered for said amount December 13, 1909. The court also found a tender of said sum had been made by defendant to plaintiff before the suit was filed, and plaintiff was adjudged to pay all court costs. Plaintiff excepted to the judgment, and perfected an appeal.

[1] It is assigned that “the court erred in sustaining the defendant’s eleventh special exception to so much of plaintiff’s allegations in his first amended original petition as seeks to recover commissions on voluntary or mail and other orders received and- shipped by defendant during 1906 to the territory assigned to plaintiff.”

Plaintiff, in his pleadings, set out the contract upon which the suit is based, and under which he claimed commissions as follows: “"Vye will pay you on shipments during 1906 in excess of $100,000 into territory in Western Texas, assigned you, as follows: On shipments over and above $100,000.00 to the amount of $17,500.00 a commission of 2 *572 per cent.; on the excess shipments above $17,-500.00 a commission of 1 per cent, to be paid. In estimating the shipments into the territory for 1906 such shipments as shall be made on orders taken by D. L. Countryman, prior to February 1st, 1906, shall not be included.”

After alleging liability for orders taken by plaintiff, he further pleaded as follows: “And defendant received mail and personal orders for the same time from said territory, aggregating the sum of $26,074.62.” And further alleged: “That in addition defendant received mail and personal orders during 1906 from the. territory traveled by plaintiff and assigned him in said contract, aggregating about $26,074.62, and all the facts bearing thereon are in possession of defendant, and plaintiff cannot give any better description of the same; * * * that he has repeatedly applied to defendant for a list of such mail orders and all orders sent in by plaintiff, and defendant has declined and refused to furnish same, and he can give no better description of any of said sales or orders than herein stated.”

Defendant demurred to the allegations, seeking to recover for mail orders sent from the territory named in the petition to the defendant, and all other orders than those solicited and obtained by plaintiff as alleged by him, for the reason that under the construction of said contract as contended by him he would be entitled to commissions only on orders so obtained by him, and upon no others. The court sustained said exceptions.

Plaintiff then filed a trial amendment, and alleged further on the same matter of mail and other orders than those taken by plaintiff as follows: “Plaintiff alleges that under his contract herein he was to have commissions on all shipments into his territory during 1906, and that as to orders taken by plaintiff he was to have commissions on all orders taken by him, even though shipped after the end of that year, and under the plain import of the contract he was entitled to commissions on all shipments into his territory during 1906, including mail and other orders, and as to this part of the contract the language on its face governs, and the allegations in the amended petition relate mainly to orders taken during 1906; and plaintiff now alleges that under said contract he was entitled to have commissions per its terms on all mail and other orders received by defendant during 1906 from territory assigned to plaintiff; and .he now alleges and claims he is entitled to such commissions on sums, which aggregate the sum of $26,074.62, for which he sues, and whereby he says defendant is liable to him for said sum, yet though often requested has failed and refused, and still fails and refuses, to pay same or any part thereof, to his damage in said sum and interest at 6 per cent, per annum since January 1, 1907, and all as alleged in his said amended petition herein, for all of which he prays judgment.” Defendant filed similar exceptions to the trial amendment, which the court sustained. We are of the opinion there was' no error in sustaining these exceptions. The contract sued on is plain in its terms and free from ambiguity, and must be construed according to its plain import.

An agreed statement was filed in the case by the parties as follows:

“(1) That the aggregate amount of orders obtained by appellant on which shipments were made during 1906 was the sum of $77,-5S2.89.
“(2) That the aggregate amount of orders obtained by appellant on which shipments were made after 1906, or during the year 1907, was $73,545.77.
“(3) That the aggregate amount of shipments made by appellant during 1906 into said territory or voluntary or mail orders, not solicited or obtained by appellant, nor induced by him in any wise, was $26,074.62.”

This statement met the complaint in the petition that all the facts bearing on the allegation as to the amount of shipments on mail and personal orders were in the possession of defendant, and for this reason plaintiff was not able to give a better description of the same.

[2] The second assignment of error is that “the court erred in sustaining defendant’s fourth special exception, set forth in paragraph 5 of its said answer, to so much of plaintiff’s petition as relates to correspond-1 ence between plaintiff, and defendant had just prior to signing contract on January 9, 1906, because the same interprets and explains the contract, and especially the use of the word ‘shipment’ in the contract, and as showing plaintiff was entitled to commissions on all orders taken or sales made by him and shipped during 1906, and also those taken during 1906, but shipped after that date; also commissions on all mail orders from the territory assigned plaintiff and received and shipped during 1906, the claim being for commissions on all shipments in excess of $100,000.

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 570, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-studebaker-bros-mfg-co-texapp-1911.